Elmer Winters appeals from a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims,
1
Winters v. West,
12 Vet.
BACKGROUND
Veteran Elmer Winters filed claims in 1987 for disability ratings for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and peripheral neuropathy. His claims were denied, and he did not appeal the denial. Ten years later, in 1997, he asked the Regional Office of the Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA”) to reopen the claims based on the presentation of new and material evidence. See 38 U.S.C. § 5108; 2 38 C.F.R. § 3.156 (1997).
The Regional Office denied the request to reopen the claims, on the ground that Mr. Winters did not have a medical diagnosis of either of these disorders, and therefore he did not present new and material evidence sufficient to warrant reopening his claims. Mr. Winters appealed to the Board of Veterans’ Appeals (“Board”). The Board affirmed, holding that the evidence presented was not “new and material” under the test set forth in
Colvin v. Derwinski,
In between the time the Board made its ruling and the time the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims decided Mr. Winters’s appeal, this court issued its decision in
Hodge v. West,
In deciding Mr. Winters’s appeal, the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, sitting en banc, recognized that, because of the intervening change in the law wrought by
Hodge,
the Board’s decision could not be sustained on the grounds relied upon by the Board. The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims then referred to its concurrent decision in
Elkins v. West,
Under the pre-Hodge practice, the test for “material” was so strict that any time it was met, the claim was deemed to be well grounded. Thus, once the evidence was found to be new and material, the DVA was able to proceed immediately to the merits. Under the lesser standard of Hodge, however, this linkage no longer necessarily held. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims reexamined its earlier practice, and established a new procedure in new and material evidence cases.
The previous test was set forth in
Manio v. Derwinski,
The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims then applied this new
Elkins
test to Mr. Winters’s case. However, it skipped the first step, assuming that Mr. Winters had presented new and material evidence for its present purposes, and proceеded instead to the second step, reviewing “de novo” whether the claims were well grounded. The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims used the test for a well grounded claim endorsed by this court in
Epps v. Gober,
The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims held that Mr. Winters had failed to show any current mediсal diagnosis of PTSD or peripheral neuropathy, and therefore the claims could not be well grounded as a matter of law, regardless of the materiality of the new evidence. The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims found that the Board’s error in applying the Colvin test was not prejudicial, since the claims were not well grounded in any case, and therefore remand to the Board for determination of whether Mr. Winters had presented new and material evidence and whether his claim was well grounded would be “futile.”
Mr. Winters now appeals to us the Court of Appeals for Vеterans Claims’s dismissal of his PTSD claim. 3 Mr. Winters asserts that the new test established under Elkins is contrary to both the plain meaning of the relevant statute (38 U.S.C. § 5108) and the regulations promulgated by the DVA under the statute (38 C.F.R. § 3.156(a)). Even if the test is valid, Mr. Winters maintains that the application of this test is inappropriate in his circumstances, as he had no prior notice that thе requirements for a well grounded claim would be applied to his case.
Mr. Winters also contends that the attempt by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims to analyze his claim under the new standard improperly required it to make de novo findings on facts and issues that were not addressed by the Board, which considered only whether his evidence was new and material, not whether his claim was well grounded. He asserts that the changes in law brought about by Hodge and Elkins require that his case be remanded to the Board for reconsideration under the appropriate legal standards.
DISCUSSION
This court has jurisdiction to review a challenge to the validity or interpretation of a statute or regulation relied upon by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.
See
38 U.S.C. § 7292. We review independently the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims’s interpretations of statutory provisions and regulations.
See
38 U.S.C. § 7292(a), (c). It is оur responsibility to decide all relevant questions of law.
See
38 U.S.C. § 7292(d). Except to the extent that an appeal presents a constitutional issue, this court may not review challenges to a factual determination or to the application of a law or regulation to the facts of
Wе note first that this case presents issues similar to those in the recent decision of this court in
Maggitt v. West,
There is a further reason why the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims’s action in the present case cannot be affirmed. The reopening statute, 38 U.S.C. § 5108, states that if the veteran presеnts new and material evidence, “the Secretary shall reopen the claim.” Thus, under the statute, only the DVA (acting on behalf of the Secretary) has the authority to reopen a claim. The statute does not give the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims that power, and the Court of Aрpeals for Veterans Claims therefore exceeded its statutory authority when it assumed Mr. Winters’s claim to be reopened in order to make its determination that the reopened claim was not well grounded.
Cf. Barnett v. Brown,
This result is also supported by fundamental principles of fairness. When Mr. Winters presented his claim, he was concerned only with attempting to demonstrate that he was presenting new and material evidence under the
Colvin
standard. None of the parties involved — Mr. Winters, the DVA, or the Board — were concerned with whether the claim was well grounded (except insofar as an allegation of new and material evidence may itself be considered well grounded and thus trigger the duty to assist,
see Ivey,
Rather than remand Mr. Winters’s ease to the DVA, the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims applied the new rules to Mr. Winters without notice, and he was deprived of the opportunity to present evidence on the well grounded claim issue before the original triers of fact. This disposition also deprived Mr. Winters of his right, under 38 U.S.C. § 5103(a), to an explanation of what evidence was missing
Mr. Winters raises
SEC v. Chenery Corp.,
The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims’s attempts to address the well-groundedness of the claim may also have required it to make improper de nоvo findings of fact.
See Hensley v. West,
The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims indicated that it was applying the rule of harmless error, pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 7261(b), and the Government urges us to affirm on this ground. However, the rule of harmless error cannot be invoked to allow the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims to decide a matter that is assigned by statute to the DVA for the initial determination. The Government also urges us to invoke the rule of harmless error and affirm on the grounds that Mr. Winters has no diagnosis of PTSD and therefore his claim must fail on remand. As the Government so often points out in these cases, this court has no authority to review factual determinations such as this, and thus we cannot affirm on this ground. We offer no view as to whether Mr. Winters has presented either new and material evidenсe or a well grounded claim.
Mr. Winters also challenges the new three-step analysis for reopening claims established by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims in
Elkins.
In light of our disposition of his claim, however, we find that we need not reach his challenge. We therefore express no opinion regarding that decision. Mr. Winters and amicus also ask us to address the standard of review to be employed by the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims to the issue of whether a claim is well grounded. However, we settled that issue in our recent decision in
Hensley. See
Because the Court of Appеals for Veterans Claims exceeded its statutory authority when it addressed whether Mr. Winters had presented a well grounded claim and prejudiced him by basing its decision on a ground different from that relied on by the Board, the decision must be vacated. The case is remanded with instructions that the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims remand the case to the Board so it can reevaluate under the correct standard whether the DVA correctly determined that Mr. Winters failed to present new and material evidence that supports reopening his claim. 5
The decision of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims is
VACATED and REMANDED with instructions.
Notes
. On March 1, 1999, the name of the United Stаtes Court of Veterans Appeals was changed to the United States Court of Appeals
. All citations to U.S.C. are to the 1994 edition, unless otherwise noted. In addition, 38 U.S.C. §§ 7261 and 7292 were amended in 1998 as part of the renaming of the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (see footnote 1, supra).
. Although the Government argues against the peripheral neuropathy claim in its brief, Mr. Winters did not appeal the decision on this claim and we therefore offer no comment on it.
. As the Government did not respond to Mr. Winters’s invocation of Chenery, we do not have the benefit of its views on the subject.
. We also note that the regulation covering evaluation of PTSD claims has recently changed,
compare
38 C.F.R. § 3.304(f) (2000) with 38 C.F.R. § 3.304(0 (1999). On remand, the Board should determine which version of
